FIBER-FED ADVANCED PULSED PLASMA THRUSTER (FPPT)
20200025183 ยท 2020-01-23
Assignee
Inventors
- Curtis Woodruff (Savoy, IL)
- Darren King (Champaign, IL)
- Rodney Burton (Champaign, IL)
- David L. Carroll (Champaign, IL)
Cpc classification
B64G1/402
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F03H1/0012
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01G4/38
ELECTRICITY
F03H1/0087
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B64G1/403
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A Fiber-fed Pulsed Plasma Thruster (FPPT) will enable enhanced low Earth orbit, cis-lunar, and deep space missions for small satellites. FPPT technology utilizes an electric motor to feed PTFE fiber to its discharge region, enabling high PPT propellant throughput and variable exposed fuel area. An innovative, parallel ceramic capacitor bank dramatically lowers system specific mass. FPPT minimizes range safety concerns by the use of non-pressurized, non-toxic, inert propellant and construction materials. Estimates are that a 1 U (10 cm10 cm10 cm, or 1 liter) volume FPPT thruster package may provide more than 10,000 N-s total impulse and a delta-V of 1.4 km/s delta-V for an 8 kg CubeSat.
Claims
1. A pulsed plasma thruster comprising: a spool having a fiber propellant wound thereon; a stepper motor in communication with the fiber propellant to pull the fiber propellant from the spool; an insulated tube configured to have one end in communication with the stepper motor such that the fiber propellant is fed into the insulated tube; an anode bored through and having one end in communication with the insulated tube, such that the fiber propellant travels through the anode, the anode having an exit end defined with a flange extending radially Inward configured to create a stop between the edge of the flange and the exit end of the anode, wherein the fiber propellant fed through the anode stops at the stop; a coaxial insulator positioned about the exit end of the anode; a cathode connected to the insulator, the cathode having an interior profile shaped into a nozzle region; and an igniter fitted through an opening in the cathode, wherein when the igniter is pulsed the igniter is configured to expel electrons toward the anode to ignite a primary high current, high magnetic field discharge between the anode and cathode thereby creating a plasma that vaporizes the fiber propellant at the stop, and wherein the vaporizing fiber propellant combines with the high current discharge to create a partially ionized gas electromagnetically and electrothermally accelerated outward from the nozzle region to produce thrust, and wherein as the fiber propellant vaporizes the stepper motor feeds more fiber propellant from the spool to the stop.
2. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 1 further comprising a power processing unit electrically connected to the anode and to the cathode.
3. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 2, wherein the power processing unit is electrically connected in parallel to a capacitor bank and to a thruster anode and cathode and wherein the capacitor bank is configured to lower the equivalent series resistance and therefore raising pulse current and {right arrow over (j)}{right arrow over (B)} thrust.
4. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 3, wherein the capacitor bank includes a plurality of low mass multi-layer ceramic capacitors formed in a parallel configuration to increase capacitance while maintaining low equivalent series resistance.
5. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 1, wherein the propellant fiber is made of polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon).
6. A pulsed plasma thruster comprising: a fiber propellant feed system including a motor configured to pull a fiber propellant from a spool and feed the fiber propellant into a centrality located anode and towards a stop defined at an end of the anode; a cathode insulated from the anode; an igniter fitted through an opening in the cathode, wherein when the igniter is triggered the igniter pulse is configured to expel electrons into the nozzle region to ignite a primary high energy discharge between the anode and cathode thereby creating a plasma that vaporizes the fiber propellant at the stop, and wherein the vaporizing fiber propellant combines with the high energy discharge to create a partially ionized gas electromagnetically and electrothermally accelerated to produce thrust, and wherein as the fiber propellant vaporizes the motor feeds more fiber propellant from the spool to the stop.
7. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 6 further comprising a power processing unit electrically connected to the anode and to the cathode.
8. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 7, wherein the power processing unit is electrically connected in parallel to a capacitor bank and to a thruster anode and cathode and wherein the capacitor bank is configured to lower the equivalent series resistance and therefore raising discharge current and {right arrow over (j)}{right arrow over (B)} thrust.
9. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 8 wherein the capacitor bank includes a plurality of low mass multi-layer ceramic capacitors formed in a parallel configuration to increase capacitance while maintaining low equivalent series resistance.
10. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 7, wherein the fiber propellant is made of polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon).
11. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 7 further comprising an insulated tube configured between the motor and the anode and further configured to communicate the fiber propellant from the motor to the anode.
12. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 7, wherein the cathode is secured to an insulator end cap positioned about an exit end of the anode.
13. The pulsed plasma thruster of claim 7, wherein the anode tip and stop are configured to expose the outer surface of the fiber propellant to the discharge by moving the anode and stop further toward the nozzle exit and by providing openings located in the anode thereby exposing more of the outer surface of the Teflon fiber to the discharge.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0012] The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee. A fuller understanding of the foregoing may be had by reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0017] A schematic of one embodiment of Applicant's Fiber-fed Pulsed Plasma Thruster (FPPT) generally referenced as element 100 is shown in
[0018] In greater detail of
[0019] In operation, the motor pulls fiber fuel from the spool and feeds it through the feed tube into the anode. The fiber fuel will be fed to the end of the anode at the stop 130. When the igniter pulse is triggered it expels electrons into nozzle region which are attracted to the positively charged anode, consequently triggering the primary high energy discharge to ignite between the anode 137 and cathode 170, thereby creating a radiative plasma that heats and vaporizes the surface of the fiber propellant, allowing the discharge to create a dissociated and partially ionized plasma that will be electromagnetically and electrothermally accelerated outward from the nozzle to produce thrust. As the exposed surface of the fiber fuel ablates away, the motor is controlled to feed more fiber to the stop 130.
[0020] While classic PPT technology is mature, it has historically been limited by its size and propellant load, for example Applicant's prior PPT-11 technology, FIG. 1 [U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,530,219 B1, 7,296,257, and 7,926,258]. Technology advances in the past 20 years can now be applied to the Teflon PPT to create the Innovative FPPT, making several significant improvements to the classic PPT technologies:
[0021] Coaxial geometry.
[0022] A high I.sub.sp thruster using a cathode design similar to the PPT-11 thruster,
[0023] Fiber feed system.
[0024] The design of the PPT Teflon feed system has always been a challenge for high throughput PPTs, as observed with the large (85 liter) envelope for the AFRPL/Fairchild millipound (4.4 mN) thruster, and the small geometry-limited propellant mass for the coaxial PPT-11 (
[0025] High voltage capacitors.
[0026] Improvements in capacitor technology, specifically the dielectric, have not significantly improved specific mass or volume, but have significantly lowered equivalent series resistance (ESR), with two major benefits: (1) low ESR increases pulse current, raising {right arrow over (j)}{right arrow over (B)} and efficiency; (2) low ESR permits a reduction in capacitance and discharge energy, compensated by as much as an order-of-magnitude increase in pulse rate, with capacitor mass correspondingly reduced. Reductions in capacitor mass also reduce circuit inductance, raising current and also {right arrow over (j)}{right arrow over (B)} thrust. A typical PPT-11 current pulse (
[0027] Ignition system.
[0028] Prior PPT ignition was based on a fast pulse delivered to a semiconductor igniter plug developed for gas turbine ignition. Igniter circuit switching has improved from vacuum gaps to silicon-controlled rectifiers to MOSFETs, with the latter depending on the availability of higher voltage devices.
[0029] Power processing unit (PPU).
[0030] The PPU for the FPPT will supply a nominal 1 kV charging current source to the capacitors, a pulse to the igniter plug, and low voltage current to the feed system motor. High power electronics technology and higher voltage operation have allowed reductions in PPU specific mass, so that 3 kg/kW (3 g/W) at 94% efficiency was achieved in 2001. Modern PPU specific mass is estimated at <2 kg/kW; for example, Applicant's 40 W CHIPS PPU is just under 40 grams (1 kg/kW).
[0031] PPT physics.
[0032] The time-dependent heating and sublimation of the Teflon surface during and after the pulse is now well understood and is used to predict pressure decay time in the Inter-electrode region. Experimental PPT measurements of Antonsen were in agreement with the plasma modeling of Keidar and Boyd. The combined effect of mixed {right arrow over (j)}{right arrow over (B)} and electrothermal acceleration on PPT performance is now well understood using a two-fluid model as developed by Burton. Unlike all previous PPTs, preliminary analysis of the FPPT predicts operation in a {right arrow over (j)}{right arrow over (B)} pinch mode near the central anode, resulting in regions of a zero value of electron Hall parameter and high ion current on-axis and high values of electron Hall parameter off-axis, with ion-neutral charge exchange an important aspect of the physics.
[0033] Several factors result in increasing system performance:
[0034] Pulse energy.
[0035] Higher pulse energy raises efficiency. A robust 40 J or higher design is desired.
[0036] Total thruster power available.
[0037] Using an energy storage battery, high power small satellite thruster systems appear possible. We consider a nominal FPPT power level to be 40-80 W at a pulse rate of a few Hertz. This is a power level comparable to the Busek Bit-3 ion thruster.
[0038] Pulse shape.
[0039] Pulse shape is controlled through capacitance, inductance, and circuit resistance. The design goal is 30 kA peak current and a several s pulse half-period.
[0040] Capacitor life.
[0041] PPT-11 used a 6.8 kg bank of Unison Industries mica capacitors rated at Vmax=1850 V but only charged to 1300 V. The life of ceramic caps scales inversely as the nth power of charging voltage [L(Vmax/V).sup.n] where n is typically 103. Appropriate voltage ratings for ceramic caps are chosen through testing to ensure a high life cycle safety factor in capacitor operation.
[0042] Pulse rate and throttling.
[0043] By controlling pulse rate, energy per pulse, and propellant feed rate, the 1 U FPPT system is fully throttleable over 0-100% thrust.
[0044] ESR.
[0045] Equivalent series resistance becomes a limiting factor as the size of the capacitor bank is reduced. An efficient PPT needs to operate at a total impedance of 10-15 m, so that ESR<<1 m is needed to keep capacitor heating to a few percent of the power input.
[0046] Peak current.
[0047] PPT-11 peak current was 30 kA, with thrust having both a major electromagnetic and a minor electrothermal component, quantified by =electromagnetic thrust/total thrust. It has been determined theoretically and experimentally that PPT efficiency increases as increases. The electromagnetic impulse bit is given by
and total thrust is measured on the thrust stand. The pulse current scales as V/(L/C).sup.1/2, where L is the circuit inductance and the circuit is impedance-matched to the discharge to minimize ringing (
[0048] Ambient pressure.
[0049] PPT operation requires low pressure in the electrode gap at the time that cap voltage is applied to prevent an unwanted breakdown. Post-pulse sublimation from the propellant face produces a decaying pressure profile, which requires several milliseconds to disperse. This time constant places an upper limit on pulse rate of the order of 100 pps.
[0050] Igniters.
[0051] The igniter materials and possible geometry design adjustments can be implemented to achieve a goal of greater than 10 million pulses with a single or multiple igniter. If a single igniter cannot achieve this goal, then multiple igniters can be used in an alternating firing sequence. A >100% life cycle test is desired to reduce risk and clearly demonstrate reliable long-term operation; this corresponds to >10 million pulses with a single FPPT unit. Multiple igniters can also be implemented for redundancy, and to reduce required pulse count per igniter by at least a factor of 2. Testing is used to determine the appropriate path towards developing igniters with the capability of several tens of millions of pulses.
[0052] Materials and Geometry Optimization.
[0053] Multiple anode materials can be tested to minimize anode erosion without comprising performance. Anode development is critical, because the desired anode has a small diameter, yet must contain the fiber, expose the fiber to the discharge, and be sufficiently robust to tolerate erosion. Feed configurations and materials will be tested for reliability and electrode loss. Two or more different geometries of the cathode cone will be investigated to minimize the volume envelope of the thruster-head and optimize the EM thrust term (rc/ro) while maintaining (or improving) overall thruster performance. Careful consideration should be given to the fabrication (manufacturability) of the anode material and cone geometry. To verify comparison and evaluation, thrust stand testing should be performed.
[0054] Performance Estimates
[0055] Table 1 shows the estimated packaged performance parameters for a typical 1 U FPPT system. A 1-liter (10 cm10 cm10 cm, or 1 U) volume FPPT thruster package may provide 10,000 N-s total impulse, enabling 1.4 km/s delta-V for an 8 kg CubeSat.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Estimated FPPT performance for a 1 U FPPT system. Item FPPT Performance Propulsion system volume 1000 cc System lifetime Not propellant limited Spacecraft temperature range Not propellant limited Propellant storage volume 440 cc Propellant PTFE Teflon fiber Propellant mass consumed 880 g Total propulsion wet mass 2000 g Spacecraft propulsion power 75 W Specific Impulse 1200 s Primary thrust 1.3 mN Nominal mass flow rate 0.111 mg/s Total impulse 10,300 N-s Volumetric impulse for 1000 cc 10,300 N-s/liter Total thrust time @ nominal 2200 hr conditions Spacecraft V, 1 U, 8 kg 1370 m/s
[0056] While elements, embodiments, and applications of the present invention have been shown and described, it is understood that the invention is not limited thereto because modifications may be made by those skilled in the art, particularly in light of the foregoing teaching. It is therefore contemplated by the appended claims to cover such modifications and incorporate those features which come within the spirit and scope of the invention.